“Athenodorus says hydrophobia, or water-dread, was first discovered in the time of Asclepiades.”
Plutarch (46–127) ancient Greek historian and philosopher
Symposiacs, book viii. Question IX
Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, 10th ed. (1919)
Source: Alice's Adventures in Wonderland & Through the Looking-Glass
“Athenodorus says hydrophobia, or water-dread, was first discovered in the time of Asclepiades.”
Plutarch (46–127) ancient Greek historian and philosopher
Symposiacs, book viii. Question IX
Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, 10th ed. (1919)
Marshall McLuhan (1911–1980) Canadian educator, philosopher, and scholar-- a professor of English literature, a literary critic, and a …
1970s, Culture Is Our Business (1970)
“The poet takes us straight into the presence of things. Not by explanation, but by indication”
L. P. Jacks (1860–1955) British educator, philosopher, and Unitarian minister
The Usurpation Of Language (1910)
Context: The poet takes us straight into the presence of things. Not by explanation, but by indication; not by exhausting its qualities, but by suggesting its value he gives us the object, raising it from the mire where it lies trodden by the concepts of the understanding, freeing it from the entanglements of all that “the intellect perceives as if constituting its essence.” Thus exhibited, the object itself becomes the meeting-ground of the ages, a centre where millions of minds can enter together into possession of the common secret. It is true that language is here the instrument with which the fetters of language are broken. Words are the shifting detritus of the ages; and as glass is made out of the sand, so the poet makes windows for the soul out of the very substance by which it has been blinded and oppressed. In all great poetry there is a kind of “kenosis” of the understanding, a self-emptying of the tongue. Here language points away from itself to something greater than itself.
Carl Sagan (1934–1996) American astrophysicist, cosmologist, author and science educator
http://www.sciencefriday.com/segments/carl-sagan-science-is-a-way-of-thinking/
Carl Sagan: 'Science Is a Way of Thinking', Science Friday interview from May 1996
27 December 2013
“For a long time the human instinct to understand was thwarted by facile religious explanations.”
Carl Sagan book Cosmos
Source: Cosmos (1980), p. 173